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New Approaches to Classic Problems Outline 2 classic problems Problem of Divine Foreknowledge and Human Freedom Problem of Perfect Divine Goodness and Divine Freedom 1 new approach to each Divine Foreknowledge and Human Freedom ID: 588987

foreknowledge divine freedom god divine foreknowledge god freedom human free infallible exhaustive existence bring events humans approach causal determinism moral justification perfect

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Slide1

Philosophy of Religion

New Approaches to Classic ProblemsSlide2

Outline

2 classic problems

Problem of Divine Foreknowledge and Human Freedom

Problem of Perfect Divine Goodness and Divine Freedom

1 new approach to eachSlide3

Divine Foreknowledge and Human Freedom

The Problem

The New ApproachSlide4

Divine Foreknowledge and Human Freedom

The Problem

Take any person, S, and any action A that person performs at any time t. Slide5

Divine Foreknowledge and Human Freedom

The Problem

Take any person, S, and any action A that person performs at any time t. Suppose that God has exhaustive and infallible foreknowledge. Thus, for any time t*, earlier than t, God knows that S does A at t. This arguably implies that S cannot do A at t

freely

:Slide6

Divine Foreknowledge and Human Freedom

The Problem

Take any person, S, and any action A that person performs at any time t. Suppose that God has exhaustive and infallible foreknowledge. Thus, for any time t*, earlier than t, God knows that S does A at t. This arguably implies that S cannot do A at t

freely

:

And, since S, A, and t were selected arbitrarily, the argument could be repeated for

any action of any person at any time

.Slide7

Divine Foreknowledge and Human Freedom

The Problem

Divine foreknowledge that S does A at t arguably implies that S cannot do A at t

freely

:

At t, it has to be that God believed at t* that S does A at t.

Necessarily, if God believes at t* that S does A at t, then S does A at t.

So, at t, it has to be that S does A at t.

If, at t, it has to be that S does A at t, then it is not the case that S does A freely at t.

So, it is not the case that S does A freely at t.Slide8

Divine Foreknowledge and Human Freedom

The Problem

Divine foreknowledge that S does A at t arguably implies that S cannot do A at t

freely

:

At t, it has to be that God believed at t* that S does A at t.

Necessarily, if God believes at t* that S does A at t, then S does A at t.

So, at t, it has to be that S does A at t.

If, at t, it has to be that S does A at t, then it is not the case that S does A freely at t.

So, it is not the case that S does A freely at t.

P1: A version of the principle of the ‘Necessity of the Past’. Whatever has already happened

has

to have happened at later times. So, God’s past beliefs

have

to have happened at later times.Slide9

Divine Foreknowledge and Human Freedom

The Problem

Divine foreknowledge that S does A at t arguably implies that S cannot do A at t

freely

:

At t, it has to be that God believed at t* that S does A at t.

Necessarily, if God believes at t* that S does A at t, then S does A at t.

So, at t, it has to be that S does A at t.

If, at t, it has to be that S does A at t, then it is not the case that S does A freely at t.

So, it is not the case that S does A freely at t.

P2: Guaranteed by divine infallibility. God cannot be wrong.Slide10

Divine Foreknowledge and Human Freedom

The Problem

Divine foreknowledge that S does A at t arguably implies that S cannot do A at t

freely

:

At t, it

has to be

that God believed at t* that S does A at t.

Necessarily, if God believes at t* that S does A at t, then S does A at t.

So, at t, it

has to be

that S does A at t.

If, at t, it has to be that S does A at t, then it is not the case that S does A freely at t.

So, it is not the case that S does A freely at t.

P3: Follows from 1 and 2 given the principle of the ‘Transfer of Necessity’: the ‘has to be’ operator transfers across logical entailment. Slide11

Divine Foreknowledge and Human Freedom

The Problem

Divine foreknowledge that S does A at t arguably implies that S cannot do A at t

freely

:

At t, it has to be that God believed at t* that S does A at t.

Necessarily, if God believes at t* that S does A at t, then S does A at t.

So, at t, it has to be that S does A at t.

If, at t, it has to be that S does A at t, then it is not the case that S does A freely at t.

So, it is not the case that S does A freely at t.

P4: A version of the ‘Principle of Alternative Possibilities’. In order for an action to be performed freely, it has to be that the action didn’t

have

to be performed—a relevant alternative could have been instead.Slide12

Divine Foreknowledge and Human Freedom

The Problem

Divine foreknowledge that S does A at t arguably implies that S cannot do A at t

freely

:

At t, it has to be that God believed at t* that S does A at t.

Necessarily, if God believes at t* that S does A at t, then S does A at t.

So, at t, it has to be that S does A at t.

If, at t, it has to be that S does A at t, then it is not the case that S does A freely at t.

So, it is not the case that S does A freely at t.

The most well-known responses to this argument object to one of its premises. E.g.,

Boethianism

and

Ockhamism

object to 1 in different ways. Augustinianism objects to 4. You can read about these approaches in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy article on “Foreknowledge and Free Will”.Slide13

Divine Foreknowledge and Human Freedom

The Problem

Divine foreknowledge that S does A at t arguably implies that S cannot do A at t

freely

:

At t, it has to be that God believed at t* that S does A at t.

Necessarily, if God believes at t* that S does A at t, then S does A at t.

So, at t, it has to be that S does A at t.

If, at t, it has to be that S does A at t, then it is not the case that S does A

freely

at t.

So, it is not the case that S does A freely at t.

The most well-known responses to this argument object to one of its premises. E.g.,

Boethianism

and

Ockhamism

object to 1 in different ways. Augustinianism objects to 4. You can read about these approaches in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy article on “Foreknowledge and Free Will”.

Given that these canonical responses all face significant problems, there is motivation for exploring a novel approach.Slide14

Divine Foreknowledge and Human Freedom

The New Approach:

Object to the argument

indirectly

(not objecting to one particular premise or inference) as follows:Slide15

Divine Foreknowledge and Human Freedom

The New Approach:

Object to the argument

indirectly

as follows:

Human freedom is not intrinsically impossible; if it does not exist, something must explain why it doesn’t exist.

So, if the existence of infallible and exhaustive divine foreknowledge implies that humans don’t have free will, then the existence of this foreknowledge requires the existence of something that explains why humans don’t have free will.

The best candidate for what this foreknowledge could require that would explain the absence of human freedom is the truth of causal determinism.

But, we are not in a position to know that exhaustive and infallible divine foreknowledge requires causal determinism.

So, we are not in a position to know that divine foreknowledge rules out human freedom.Slide16

Divine Foreknowledge and Human Freedom

The New Approach:

Object to the argument

indirectly

as follows:

Human freedom is not intrinsically impossible; if it does not exist, something must explain why it doesn’t exist.

So, if the existence of infallible and exhaustive divine foreknowledge implies that humans don’t have free will, then the existence of this foreknowledge requires the existence of something that explains why humans don’t have free will.

The best candidate for what this foreknowledge could require that would explain the absence of human freedom is the truth of causal determinism.

But, we are not in a position to know that exhaustive and infallible divine foreknowledge requires causal determinism.

So, we are not in a position to know that divine foreknowledge rules out human freedom.

This basic strategy is articulated and defended in Chapters 2-4 of T. Ryan Byerly,

The Mechanics of Divine Foreknowledge and Providence: A Time-Ordering Account

(Bloomsbury: 2014).Slide17

Divine Foreknowledge and Human Freedom

The New Approach:

Object to the argument

indirectly

as follows:

Human freedom is not intrinsically impossible; if it does not exist, something must explain why it doesn’t exist.

So, if the existence of infallible and exhaustive divine foreknowledge implies that humans don’t have free will, then the existence of this foreknowledge requires the existence of something that explains why humans don’t have free will.

The best candidate for what this foreknowledge could require that would explain the absence of human freedom is the truth of causal determinism.

But, we are not in a position to know that exhaustive and infallible divine foreknowledge requires causal determinism.

So, we are not in a position to know that divine foreknowledge rules out human freedom.

P1: Will be granted

at least for the sake of argument

by any party to this debate. For, what the debate is about is whether divine foreknowledge poses some special challenge to human freedom. If human freedom were intrinsically impossible, there would be nothing to discuss.Slide18

Divine Foreknowledge and Human Freedom

The New Approach:

Object to the argument

indirectly

as follows:

Human freedom is not intrinsically impossible; if it does not exist, something must explain why it doesn’t exist.

So, if the existence of infallible and exhaustive divine foreknowledge implies that humans don’t have free will, then the existence of this foreknowledge requires the existence of something that explains why humans don’t have free will.

The best candidate for what this foreknowledge could require that would explain the absence of human freedom is the truth of causal determinism.

But, we are not in a position to know that exhaustive and infallible divine foreknowledge requires causal determinism.

So, we are not in a position to know that divine foreknowledge rules out human freedom.

P2: Follows from 1.Slide19

Divine Foreknowledge and Human Freedom

The New Approach:

Object to the argument

indirectly

as follows:

Human freedom is not intrinsically impossible; if it does not exist, something must explain why it doesn’t exist.

So, if the existence of infallible and exhaustive divine foreknowledge implies that humans don’t have free will, then the existence of this foreknowledge requires the existence of something that explains why humans don’t have free will.

The best candidate for what this foreknowledge could require that would explain the absence of human freedom is the truth of causal determinism.

But, we are not in a position to know that exhaustive and infallible divine foreknowledge requires causal determinism.

So, we are not in a position to know that divine foreknowledge rules out human freedom.

P3: Infallible and exhaustive divine foreknowledge requires divine beliefs, the truth of the contents of these beliefs, and a mechanism whereby these beliefs are rendered infallible. Neither the divine beliefs themselves nor the truth of their contents could be that which explains why humans lack freedom; so, this leaves the mechanism that renders divine beliefs infallible as the only candidate. But, the only mechanism we know of whereby infallible and exhaustive foreknowledge could be achieved which would also pose a threat to human freedom is if causal determinism were true and God’s foreknowledge were achieved via reliance upon it.Slide20

Divine Foreknowledge and Human Freedom

The New Approach:

Object to the argument

indirectly

as follows:

Human freedom is not intrinsically impossible; if it does not exist, something must explain why it doesn’t exist.

So, if the existence of infallible and exhaustive divine foreknowledge implies that humans don’t have free will, then the existence of this foreknowledge requires the existence of something that explains why humans don’t have free will.

The best candidate for what this foreknowledge could require that would explain the absence of human freedom is the truth of causal determinism.

But, we are not in a position to know that exhaustive and infallible divine foreknowledge requires causal

So, we are not in a position to know that divine foreknowledge rules out human freedom.

determinism. So, we are not in a position to know that divine foreknowledge rules out human freedom.

P3: Infallible and exhaustive divine foreknowledge requires divine beliefs, the truth of the contents of these beliefs, and a mechanism whereby these beliefs are rendered infallible.

Neither the divine beliefs themselves nor the truth of their contents could be that which explains why humans lack freedom

; so, this leaves the mechanism that renders divine beliefs infallible as the only candidate. But, the only mechanism we know of whereby infallible and exhaustive foreknowledge could be achieved which would also pose a threat to human freedom is if causal determinism were true and God’s foreknowledge were achieved via reliance upon it.

This is because the belief (and the truth of its content) is either explained by what it is about, or the belief (and the truth of its content) and what it is about share a common explanation. But, in neither case could the belief (or the truth of its content) explain why humans lack freedom.Slide21

Divine Foreknowledge and Human Freedom

The New Approach:

Object to the argument

indirectly

as follows:

Human freedom is not intrinsically impossible; if it does not exist, something must explain why it doesn’t exist.

So, if the existence of infallible and exhaustive divine foreknowledge implies that humans don’t have free will, then the existence of this foreknowledge requires the existence of something that explains why humans don’t have free will.

The best candidate for what this foreknowledge could require that would explain the absence of human freedom is the truth of causal determinism.

But, we are not in a position to know that exhaustive and infallible divine foreknowledge requires causal determinism.

So, we are not in a position to know that divine foreknowledge rules out human freedom.

P3: Infallible and exhaustive divine foreknowledge requires divine beliefs, the truth of the contents of these beliefs, and a mechanism whereby these beliefs are rendered infallible.

Neither the divine beliefs themselves nor the truth of their contents could be that which explains why humans lack freedom

; so, this leaves the mechanism that renders them infallible as the only candidate. But, the only mechanism we know of whereby

infallible and exhaustive foreknowledge could be achieved

which would also pose a threat to human freedom is if

causal determinism

were true and God’s foreknowledge were achieved via reliance upon it.

CD is the thesis that, given the past and laws, there is only one way the future can go. If this thesis is true, God could rely upon his knowledge of the past and laws to know the future infallibly and exhaustively.Slide22

Divine Foreknowledge and Human Freedom

The New Approach:

Object to the argument

indirectly

as follows:

Human freedom is not intrinsically impossible; if it does not exist, something must explain why it doesn’t exist.

So, if the existence of infallible and exhaustive divine foreknowledge implies that humans don’t have free will, then the existence of this foreknowledge requires the existence of something that explains why humans don’t have free will.

The best candidate for what this foreknowledge could require that would explain the absence of human freedom is the truth of causal determinism.

But, we are not in a position to know that exhaustive and infallible divine foreknowledge requires causal determinism.

So, we are not in a position to know that divine foreknowledge rules out human freedom.

P3: Infallible and exhaustive divine foreknowledge requires divine beliefs, the truth of the contents of these beliefs, and a mechanism whereby these beliefs are rendered infallible.

Neither the divine beliefs themselves nor the truth of their contents could be that which explains why humans lack freedom

; so, this leaves the mechanism that renders them infallible as the only candidate. But, the only mechanism we know of whereby infallible and exhaustive foreknowledge could be achieved which would also

pose a threat to human freedom

is if

causal determinism

were true and God’s foreknowledge were achieved via reliance upon it.

There are well-known reasons for thinking that the truth of causal determinism would threaten human freedom.Slide23

Divine Foreknowledge and Human Freedom

The New Approach:

Object to the argument

indirectly

as follows:

Human freedom is not intrinsically impossible; if it does not exist, something must explain why it doesn’t exist.

So, if the existence of infallible and exhaustive divine foreknowledge implies that humans don’t have free will, then the existence of this foreknowledge requires the existence of something that explains why humans don’t have free will.

The best candidate for what this foreknowledge could require that would explain the absence of human freedom is the truth of causal determinism.

But, we are not in a position to know that exhaustive and infallible divine foreknowledge requires causal determinism.

So, we are not in a position to know that divine foreknowledge rules out human freedom.

P4: An ongoing research project. Defending this claim is best achieved by articulating and disjoining numerous distinct accounts of

how

God might achieve exhaustive and infallible foreknowledge without relying upon the truth of causal determinism. For example, some

Boethian

approaches attempt to do this;

Molinist

approaches attempt to do this; some

Thomistic

approaches attempt to do this; and there are new proposals being articulated as well—such as the time-ordering approach. Slide24

Divine Foreknowledge and Human Freedom

The New Approach:

Object to the argument

indirectly

as follows:

Human freedom is not intrinsically impossible; if it does not exist, something must explain why it doesn’t exist.

So, if the existence of infallible and exhaustive divine foreknowledge implies that humans don’t have free will, then the existence of this foreknowledge requires the existence of something that explains why humans don’t have free will.

The best candidate for what this foreknowledge could require that would explain the absence of human freedom is the truth of causal determinism.

But, we are not in a position to know that exhaustive and infallible divine foreknowledge requires causal determinism.

P4: An ongoing research project. Defending this claim is best achieved by articulating and disjoining numerous distinct accounts of

how

God might achieve exhaustive and infallible foreknowledge without relying upon the truth of causal determinism. For example, some

Boethian

approaches attempt to do this;

Molinist

approaches attempt to do this; some

Thomistic

approaches attempt to do this; and there are new proposals being articulated as well—such as the time-ordering approach.

Boethianism

: Michael Rota, “The Eternity Solution to the Problem of Human Freedom and Divine Foreknowledge,”

European Journal for Philosophy of Religion

2, 1 (2010): 165-86.

Molinism

: Tom Flint,

Divine Providence: The

Molinist

Account

(Cornell University Press: 2006).

Thomism: Hugh McCann,

Creation and the Sovereignty of God

(Indiana University Press: 2012). Matthews Grant, “Can a Libertarian Hold that Our Acts are Caused by God?”

Faith and Philosophy

27, 1 (2010): 22-44.

Time-ordering: T. Ryan Byerly,

The Mechanics of Divine Foreknowledge and Providence: A Time-Ordering Account

(Bloomsbury: 2014).Slide25

Divine Foreknowledge and Human Freedom

The New Approach:

Object to the argument

indirectly

as follows:

Human freedom is not intrinsically impossible; if it does not exist, something must explain why it doesn’t exist.

So, if the existence of infallible and exhaustive divine foreknowledge implies that humans don’t have free will, then the existence of this foreknowledge requires the existence of something that explains why humans don’t have free will.

The best candidate for what this foreknowledge could require that would explain the absence of human freedom is the truth of causal determinism.

But, we are not in a position to know that exhaustive and infallible divine foreknowledge requires causal determinism.

So, we are not in a position to know that divine foreknowledge rules out human freedom.

If 2-4 are true, then no argument attempting to show that divine foreknowledge rules out human freedom puts us in a position to know that divine foreknowledge rules out human freedom.Slide26

Divine Perfect Goodness

and Divine

Freedom

The Problem

A New ApproachSlide27

Divine Perfect Goodness

and Divine

Freedom

The Problem

There is motivation for theists to claim that God is both perfectly good and possesses free will. But, there is an apparent conflict between God being perfect good and God possessing free will:Slide28

Divine Perfect Goodness

and Divine

Freedom

The Problem

There is motivation for theists to claim that God is both perfectly good and possesses free will. But, there is an apparent conflict between God being perfect good and God possessing free will:

If God is perfectly good, then God is unable to bring about events for which there is no moral justification.

If God is free, God is able to bring about events for which there is no moral justification.

It cannot be that God is both able and unable to bring about events for which there is no moral justification.Slide29

Divine Perfect Goodness

and Divine

Freedom

The Problem

There is motivation for theists to claim that God is both perfectly good and possesses free will. But, there is an apparent conflict between God being perfect good and God possessing free will:

If God is perfectly good, then God is unable to bring about events for which there is no moral justification.

If God is free, God is able to bring about events for which there is no moral justification.

It cannot be that God is both able and unable to bring about events for which there is no moral justification.

God wouldn’t be perfectly good if God brought about (or even permitted) an event for which there was no moral justification. But, perfect goodness is supposed to be an

essential

divine attribute. So,

necessarily

God doesn’t bring about such events—it isn’t possible that God brings about such events. Yet, if it isn’t possible that God brings about such events, then God is not able

to bring about such events. Slide30

Divine Perfect Goodness

and Divine

Freedom

The Problem

There is motivation for theists to claim that God is both perfectly good and possesses free will. But, there is an apparent conflict between God being perfect good and God possessing free will:

If God is perfectly good, then God is unable to bring about events for which there is no moral justification.

If God is free, God is able to bring about events for which there is no moral justification.

It cannot be that God is both able and unable to bring about events for which there is no moral justification.

Theists tend to affirm that the value of an agent’s freedom is enhanced to the extent that the agent is able to perform both better and worse kinds of acts—endorsing this idea helps with the problem of evil. Since God is supposed to be a perfect being, it would appear to follow that God must then be able to perform both the best and worst kinds of acts. So, God must be able to bring about events for which there is no moral justification. Slide31

Divine Perfect Goodness

and Divine

Freedom

The Problem

There is motivation for theists to claim that God is both perfectly good and possesses free will. But, there is an apparent conflict between God being perfect good and God possessing free will:

If God is perfectly good, then God is unable to bring about events for which there is no moral justification.

If God is free, God is able to bring about events for which there is no moral justification.

It cannot be that God is both able and unable to bring about events for which there is no moral justification.

By in large, philosophers working on this problem have tended to reject 2, identifying asymmetries between humans and God that explain why the ability to bring about events for which there is no moral justification would enhance human freedom but not divine freedom.Slide32

Divine Perfect Goodness

and Divine

Freedom

The Problem

There is motivation for theists to claim that God is both perfectly good and possesses free will. But, there is an apparent conflict between God being perfect good and God possessing free will:

If God is perfectly good, then God is unable to bring about events for which there is no moral justification.

If God is free, God is able to bring about events for which there is no moral justification.

It cannot be that God is both able and unable to bring about events for which there is no moral justification.

By in large, philosophers working on this problem have tended to reject 2, identifying asymmetries between humans and God that explain why the ability to bring about events for which there is no moral justification would enhance human freedom but not divine freedom.

However, this approach:

Tends to rely on endorsing the controversial doctrine of divine simplicity in order to account for the relevant asymmetries, and

Is counterintuitive, in that it maintains that as one advances in goodness toward divine goodness, one

loses

abilitiesSlide33

Divine Perfect Goodness

and Divine

Freedom

The Problem

There is motivation for theists to claim that God is both perfectly good and possesses free will. But, there is an apparent conflict between God being perfect good and God possessing free will:

If God is perfectly good, then God is unable to bring about events for which there is no moral justification.

If God is free, God is able to bring about events for which there is no moral justification.

It cannot be that God is both able and unable to bring about events for which there is no moral justification.

By in large, philosophers working on this problem have tended to reject 2, identifying asymmetries between humans and God that explain why the ability to bring about events for which there is no moral justification would enhance human freedom but not divine freedom.

However, this approach:

Tends to rely on endorsing the controversial doctrine of divine simplicity in order to account for the relevant asymmetries, and

Is counterintuitive, in that it maintains that as one advances in goodness toward divine goodness, one

loses

abilities

So, a novel approach is well-motivatedSlide34

Divine Perfect Goodness

and Divine

Freedom

The Problem

A New Approach

Grant that by virtue of divine freedom, God is able to bring about events that have no moral justification, but maintain that God necessarily exercises perfect self-control over this ability.Slide35

Divine Perfect Goodness

and Divine

Freedom

The Problem

A New Approach

Grant that by virtue of divine freedom, God is able to bring about events that have no moral justification, but maintain that God necessarily exercises perfect self-control over this ability.

This approach is articulated and defended in T. Ryan Byerly, “The All-Powerful, Perfectly Good, and Free God,”

Oxford Studies in Philosophy of Religion

, vol. 8, ed. Jonathan

Kvanvig

(Oxford University Press: forthcoming).Slide36

Divine Perfect Goodness

and Divine

Freedom

A New Approach

Grant that by virtue of divine freedom, God is able to bring about events that have no moral justification, but maintain that God necessarily exercises perfect self-control over this ability.

Key features of this approach:Slide37

Divine Perfect Goodness

and Divine

Freedom

A New Approach

Grant that by virtue of divine freedom, God is able to bring about events that have no moral justification, but maintain that God necessarily exercises perfect self-control over this ability.

Key features of this approach:

Draws on “Luther cases,” where an agent would claim that, by virtue of her own character, she

“couldn’t

” perform some act (e.g., torturing her child for a nickel). The sense in which the agent

couldn’t

act this way derives from an ability—her control over herself—not from any

inability

, as on the alternative approach.Slide38

Divine Perfect Goodness

and Divine

Freedom

A New Approach

Grant that by virtue of divine freedom, God is able to bring about events that have no moral justification, but maintain that God necessarily exercises perfect self-control over this ability.

Key features of this approach:

Draws on recent work defending Neo-Aristotelian approaches which take powers to be fundamental. On such approaches, it is possible to deny that the power to bring about an event requires the possibility of bringing about that event. Accordingly, God can have the power to bring about events which lack moral justification without it being possible that God does so.